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Letter to the Editor: Stratification using biological factors should be performed in more CFS studies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 October 2009

TOM KINDLON*
Affiliation:
Information Officer (voluntary position), Irish ME/CFS Association, PO Box 3075, Dublin 2, Ireland.
*
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Abstract

Type
Correspondence
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2010

The careful work of Roberts and colleagues (Reference Roberts, Charler, Papadopoulos, Wessely, Chalder and Cleare2009), in examining possible predictors in the response of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) patients to Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT), is to be welcomed. The results are consistent with findings reported by Jason et al. (Reference Jason, Torres-Harding, Maher, Reynolds, Brown, Sorenson, Donalek, Corradi, Fletcher and Lu2007). In a study of four non-pharmacological interventions (including CBT), they found that those with abnormal cortisol at baseline did not improve over time, while those with normal baseline cortisol recorded positive outcomes on a number of immunological and self-report measures (cortisol levels were considered abnormal if they continued to rise, were flat, or were at abnormally low over time). More recently, Jason et al. (Reference Jason, Torres-Harding, Brown, Sorenson, Julie, Corradi, Maher and Fletcher2008) reported that baseline measures including immune function, as well as activity levels, sleep status and past psychiatric diagnosis significantly differentiated those participants who demonstrated positive change over time from those who did not. Those with a dominance of the Type 2 over the Type 1 immune response, as indicated by the patterns of lymphocyte subset distributions among those with CFS, did not improve over time.

Roberts et al. (Reference Roberts, Charler, Papadopoulos, Wessely, Chalder and Cleare2009) state that ‘no studies have yet looked at whether there might be any biological factors that predict preferential response to CBT in CFS’. However, in 1991 Butler et al. (Reference Butler, Chalder, Ron and Wessely1991) found that there was a trend for patients positive for VP1 (a specific enteroviral antigen) to do worse, although this did not reach conventional statistical significance (Fisher's exact test=0.08). Lane et al. (Reference Lane, Soteriou, Zhang and Archard2003) found an association between abnormal lactate response to exercise, reflecting impaired muscle energy metabolism, and the presence of enterovirus sequences in muscle in a proportion of CFS patients, providing a possible reason for the disappointing results for some patients from CBT programmes which are focused on increasing activity.

It is generally acknowledged that CFS covers a heterogeneous population (Jason et al. Reference Jason, Corradi, Torres-Harding, Taylor and King2005). More research is required to elucidate the factors underlying neuroendocrine dysregulation in CFS, and to ascertain what treatment modalities may improve outcomes in individuals with evidence of endocrine and immunological abnormalities.

Declaration of Interest

None.

References

Butler, S, Chalder, T, Ron, M, Wessely, S (1991). Cognitive behaviour therapy in chronic fatigue syndrome. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry 54, 153158.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jason, LA, Corradi, K, Torres-Harding, S, Taylor, RR, King, C (2005). Chronic fatigue syndrome: the need for subtypes. Neuropsychology Review 15, 2958.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jason, LA, Torres-Harding, S, Brown, M, Sorenson, M, Julie, D, Corradi, K, Maher, K, Fletcher, MA (2008). Predictors of change following participation in non-pharmacologic interventions for CFS. Tropical Medicine and Health 36, 2332.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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Lane, RJ, Soteriou, BA, Zhang, H, Archard, LC (2003). Enterovirus related metabolic myopathy: a postviral fatigue syndrome. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry 74, 13821386.Google Scholar
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